English

Precision optomechanical accelerometer via hybrid test mass integration

Applied Physics 2025-08-25 v1

Abstract

Accelerometers offer motion sensing capabilities across a wide range of areas, enabling navigational awareness in consumer goods and defense applications, and playing a key role in monitoring and control systems. To date, on-chip accelerometers have largely utilized a single device layer or substrate as a test mass. This constrains the test mass to the dimensions and density of the device layer or substrate, ultimately limiting the sensitivity of the device. We demonstrate a new approach which utilizes a pick-and-place bonding technique to increase the test mass of an on-chip accelerometer. By bonding a high-density platinum sphere to a nanomechanical silicon nitride trampoline membrane, we achieve a quality factor of 1900 in air with 95 mg test mass, corresponding to a thermomechanical noise limited acceleration sensitivity of 0.8ng/Hz0.8\,\mathrm{n}g/\sqrt{\mathrm{Hz}}. We optically probe the device's response to applied accelerations with increasing level of acoustic and vibration isolation, measuring a peak sensitivity of 5.5ng/Hz5.5\,\mathrm{n}g/\sqrt{\mathrm{Hz}} at 117 Hz in air, limited by environmental vibrations. This represents the best peak sensitivity reported using a chip-integrated test mass.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2508.16088,
  title  = {Precision optomechanical accelerometer via hybrid test mass integration},
  author = {Nathaniel Bawden and Benjamin J. Carey and Poh-Meng Yeo and Nishta Arora and Leo Sementilli and Victor M. Valenzuela and Erick Romero and Glen I. Harris and Margaret Wegener and Warwick P. Bowen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.16088},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

8 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:01:09.823Z